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SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 08:19 AM

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QUOTE(MilitaryMadness @ Jun 19 2015, 07:43 AM)
MT Orkim Harmony hijackers begs to be released in exchange for the ship and crew

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The Malaysian Navy Corvette KD Terengganu is currently shadowing the hijacked oil tanker

A source with the Malaysian authorities said that the pirates who have hijacked the Malaysian-flagged oil tanker MT Orkim Harmony has begged with Malaysian authorities for allow them to be released. The pirates, who are believed to be Indonesians and whose numbers are believed to be around 8 or 9, have offered to release the ship and its 22 crew members in exchange for a boat, food, water and free passage for them to go to the Indonesian territory of Natuna island, in the South China sea.

The owners of the MT Orkim harmony has confirmed the tanker's cargo of petrol fuel worth an estimated RM 21 Million is still intact and has not been offloaded.
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bagi sos
MilitaryMadness
post Jun 19 2015, 08:32 AM

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QUOTE(alaskanbunny @ Jun 19 2015, 08:19 AM)
bagi sos
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Heard on the news on radio this morning. I have been looking for written story but none yet.

Edit: here's one,a bit light on news but has the point I posted earlier.

News Link:Perampas minta dilepaskan sebagai syarat bebaskan kru Orkim Harmony



This post has been edited by MilitaryMadness: Jun 19 2015, 08:40 AM
SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 08:40 AM

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QUOTE(MilitaryMadness @ Jun 19 2015, 08:32 AM)
Heard on the news on radio this morning. I have been looking for written story but none yet.
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waja2000
post Jun 19 2015, 09:57 AM

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Panglima ATM and Panglima RMAF at JF-17 briefing, Paris Airshow icon_rolleyes.gif

can buy few replace F5, haha...

This post has been edited by waja2000: Jun 19 2015, 10:02 AM
SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 11:25 AM

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Woman fighter pilot to make history at NDP

AUG 9, 2015 is set to be forever etched in the memory of fighter pilot Lee Mei Yi as an historic day, both for Singapore as well as herself.

She will be the first woman to fly in the fighter jet formation at the National Day Parade for the nation's 50th anniversary.

Twenty F-16 fighter jets will form the number 50 as they fly over the Padang, and Major Lee, 30, will be in one of them.

The hardest part will be to come as close as 18m from the plane in front of hers when they form the number, she said.

"It's close formation flying, so it's something we will practise to make sure we can fly accurately, in the right position.

"Since May, we have stepped up the training to make sure that we have sufficient practice."

Even though the flypast lasts just a few seconds for the spectators in the stands, some of whom will count it as their favourite moment of the parade, there are many months of hard work and preparation behind it.

The manoeuvre was first tested on flight simulators, then with a few aircraft, and finally with the full group, flight lead Lieutenant-Colonel Chan Ching Hao told reporters on Tuesday.

"There are 20 aircraft in close proximity, so we have to do a fair bit of training in order to make sure that everyone has the comfort and team chemistry to execute this manoeuvre," he said.

After take-off, the team will form up loosely over the South China Sea, moving into a tighter formation as they approach Singapore.

Another aircraft will fly above the group as they make their way towards the Padang, making sure the formation is in order, but will depart in a different direction before the planes come into view.

Said LTC Chan: "His role is very important as well, even though he's an unsung hero."

The team trains once or twice a week on top of its usual operations, and has put in a few hundred hours of flight time. The pilots have successfully carried out the flypast 10 times so far.

LTC Chan's role is to take charge of all inflight decisions, including regulating the team's speed and making sure that all of them arrive at precisely the right time

"As a flight lead, it's important to... make the speed changes as predictable as possible to minimise the ripple effect," he said.

With the planes flying at 600kmh, a difference in speed of 1kmh or 2kmh in the lead will become obvious in the rest of the formation.

linettel@sph.com.sg

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore...h.iH0c2lB5.dpuf

Attached File  ST_20150619_HOMECOVER19_1424940.pdf ( 2.28mb ) Number of downloads: 4

azriel
post Jun 19 2015, 02:32 PM

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RMAF & RTAF Exercise - Air Thamal 2015.

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http://www.thaiarmedforce.com/taf-special/...special116.html
azriel
post Jun 19 2015, 03:46 PM

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QUOTE
Russia mulling participation of its Sukhoi-35 jet in bidding contest in Indonesia

Russia June 18, 16:22 UTC+3

Rosoboronexport official said that the Russian manufacturers and exporters should boost the export capabilities of the Sukhoi-35’s

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© ITAR-TASS/Dmitry Rogulin

LE BOURGET, France, June 18. /TASS/. Russia is eyeing participation of its Sukhoi-35 fighter jet in a bidding contest in Indonesia where multirole fighters will be selected for that country’s Air Force, Sergei Kornev, the chief of the Air Force department at the Russian state weaponry trading corporation Rosoboronexport said on Thursday.

"We’re looking forward to a bidding contest and we’ll take part in it," he told reporters on the sidelines of the annual aerospace show at Le Bourget, adding that the Russian manufacturers and exporters should boost the export capabilities of the Sukhoi-35’s.


http://tass.ru/en/russia/801889
BorneoAlliance
post Jun 19 2015, 03:51 PM

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What dispute? Fresh-faced Chinese troops strike a pose on reef at centre of wrangle with US, SE Asia

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A Chinese website has published photographs from one of the reefs under China’s control in the disputed South China Sea showing female sailors posing on ocean breakwalls, vegetable gardens being watered and even pigs in a pen.

The slideshow of 17 photographs from Fiery Cross Reef shows how quickly China is developing facilities to support its troops on the newly formed island following major land reclamation.

Sina, one of China’s biggest web portals, put the slideshow online under the headline “Gratifying results on China’s Yongshu Reef: building vegetable greenhouses and growing fruit trees”.

Fiery Cross is among seven Chinese-held reefs in the Spratly chain of the South China Sea that are being transformed into artificial islands despite alarm from other claimants to the strategic waterway and growing criticism from Washington.


A sailor smiles for the camera next to food cultivated on the reef. Photo: Sina.com
Sina did not say when the pictures were taken or by whom, although they appear to have been taken from various other websites, including state radio and at least one celebrity gossip site. The pictures had no captions.

In one photograph, six female sailors in camouflaged uniforms pose on a breakwall with a greenhouse in the background. Another picture shows a female sailor, or naval officer, standing by a stone plinth reading Awe-inspiring South China Sea.

The greenhouse is a particular focus of the slideshow, with its aubergines and tomato plants growing in neat lines. A dozen plump pigs in a sty appear in one photo.

What is not shown are the reef’s military facilities, such as a 3,000-metre runway and airborne early warning radar systems that are visible on commercial satellite images.


Troops pose for a picture near the port on China's base in the Fiery Cross Reef, part of reclamation efforts that have riled neighbours amid a territorial dispute. Photo: Sina.com

Neither is there any sign of dredgers or other equipment used to reclaim land.

China said this week that some of its reclamation work in the Spratlys would be completed soon but that it would continue to build facilities.

It says the outposts will have undefined military purposes as well as help with maritime search and rescue, disaster relief, environmental protection and navigation.

There have been recent tensions between the Chinese navy and the US military around the Spratlys.

http://www.scmp.com/article/1823710/all-sm...a-disputed-reef


azriel
post Jun 19 2015, 03:52 PM

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QUOTE
Malaysia is a Typical Battleground for the Euro-Canards

by Chris Pocock - June 18, 2015, 5:10 AM

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A French air force Rafale takes off to display at the Langkawi airshow in Malaysia last March, in support of a bid to sell the French jet there. (Photo: Chris Pocock)

At the ILA Berlin Airshow three years ago, the head of the European Defence Agency (EDA) publicly bemoaned the fact that the continent’s prime aerospace companies were engaged in damaging and wasteful competition to export three rival fighters. That nothing has changed was quite evident at the recent Langkawi International Marine and Aerospace (LIMA) airshow and exhibition in Malaysia. Dassault, Eurofighter and Saab were again scrapping to secure an order–from a country that hasn’t even allocated funding for the purchase and could buy American or Russian warplanes if and when it does.

Malaysian officials have been talking about a new multi-role combat aircraft (MRCA) for the past five years. The first priority of the Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) was supposedly to replace the MiG-29s that were acquired 20 years ago. Based at Kuantan on the country’s east coast, 18 aircraft served in two squadrons originally, but two crashed and half of the remaining fleet has been grounded and cannibalized to keep the remainder flying.

The RMAF also operates one squadron of eight Boeing F/A-18D Hornets acquired in 1997, a squadron of 18 Sukhoi Su-30MKMs acquired in 2007 and a squadron of 18 BAE Hawks that have a primary combat, rather than training, role. A squadron of elderly Northrop F-5E/Fs has been retired.

In March 2013, at considerable expense, the air forces of France, Sweden and the UK all dispatched operational versions of their respective Euro-canards to the LIMA show–the Rafale, Gripen and Typhoon. Boeing sponsored the appearance of two U.S. Navy F/A-18E/F Super Hornets, and presumably also the cost of getting them there by refuelling from an Omega Air KDC-10 tanker. Moscow sent the Russian Knights aerobatic team of five Su-27 Flankers, eyeing the possibility that the RMAF might opt to buy more Su-30s to meet the MRCA requirement.

All this made for a great airshow on an otherwise sleepy island that was developed for tourism by Malaysia’s energetic former Prime Minister Dr. Mahathir Mohammed. But no choice of a new fighter was forthcoming.

The federal government in Kuala Lumpur allocates funding for big-ticket items in five-year development plans, and the MRCA was not in the current plan. Moreover, some informed observers–and at least one senior RMAF officer that spoke to AIN–believe that the air force should prioritize spending on an airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft and more maritime patrol aircraft (MPA). Besides, just how many different fighter types should a country like Malaysia seek to operate?


Read more: http://www.ainonline.com/aviation-news/def...nd-euro-canards

This post has been edited by azriel: Jun 19 2015, 03:53 PM
SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 03:53 PM

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QUOTE(BorneoAlliance @ Jun 19 2015, 03:51 PM)
What dispute? Fresh-faced Chinese troops strike a pose on reef at centre of wrangle with US, SE Asia

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

A Chinese website has published photographs from one of the reefs under China’s control in the disputed South China Sea showing female sailors posing on ocean breakwalls, vegetable gardens being watered and even pigs in a pen.

The slideshow of 17 photographs from Fiery Cross Reef shows how quickly China is developing facilities to support its troops on the newly formed island following major land reclamation.

Sina, one of China’s biggest web portals, put the slideshow online under the headline “Gratifying results on China’s Yongshu Reef: building vegetable greenhouses and growing fruit trees”.

Fiery Cross is among seven Chinese-held reefs in the Spratly chain of the South China Sea that are being transformed into artificial islands despite alarm from other claimants to the strategic waterway and growing criticism from Washington.
A sailor smiles for the camera next to food cultivated on the reef. Photo: Sina.com
Sina did not say when the pictures were taken or by whom, although they appear to have been taken from various other websites, including state radio and at least one celebrity gossip site. The pictures had no captions.

In one photograph, six female sailors in camouflaged uniforms pose on a breakwall with a greenhouse in the background. Another picture shows a female sailor, or naval officer, standing by a stone plinth reading Awe-inspiring South China Sea.

The greenhouse is a particular focus of the slideshow, with its aubergines and tomato plants growing in neat lines. A dozen plump pigs in a sty appear in one photo.

What is not shown are the reef’s military facilities, such as a 3,000-metre runway and airborne early warning radar systems that are visible on commercial satellite images.
Troops pose for a picture near the port on China's base in the Fiery Cross Reef, part of reclamation efforts that have riled neighbours amid a territorial dispute. Photo: Sina.com

Neither is there any sign of dredgers or other equipment used to reclaim land.

China said this week that some of its reclamation work in the Spratlys would be completed soon but that it would continue to build facilities.

It says the outposts will have undefined military purposes as well as help with maritime search and rescue, disaster relief, environmental protection and navigation.

There have been recent tensions between the Chinese navy and the US military around the Spratlys.

http://www.scmp.com/article/1823710/all-sm...a-disputed-reef
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waaa... they allow so long hair er
thpace
post Jun 19 2015, 03:59 PM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Jun 19 2015, 03:52 PM)
Soon it will be like we call for tender and on one will come and bid for it



BorneoAlliance
post Jun 19 2015, 04:00 PM

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The US military is building a futuristic hoverbike

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It’s not quite as sleek as a Storm Trooper’s speeder bike, but you have to start somewhere.

The push to develop a hoverbike is coming to the U.S., as a British company years into the effort is opening an office near Aberdeen Proving Ground to develop the floating vehicle for the U.S. military.

Malloy Aeronautics already has a prototype that combines the “simplicity of a motorbike with the freedom of a helicopter.” It flies much like a quadcopter, with four propellers on either side. The driver can sit in the middle, or the vehicle could fly unmanned.

The three-year-old company, which also sells drones, has been using crowdfunding to fuel R&D operations. Those efforts will now get a boost, as the U.S. Army Research Lab is interested. The military may want to use the floating bike as Tactical Reconnaissance Vehicle (TRV), which means it could end up scouting behind enemy lines.

The Army’s interest prompted a move to Maryland. Malloy’s new office will be co-located with Belcamp-based Survice Engineering Co., a 400-employee contractor that supports Army R&D efforts. The two companies will partner on the hoverbike development through an existing Survice contract with the Army Research Lab.

The companies are showing off the technology this week at the Paris Air Show, and Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford’s office announced the partnership. Rutherford said the hoverbike represents a “new frontier in aviation.”

https://technical.ly/baltimore/2015/06/18/u...oy-aeronautics/
azriel
post Jun 19 2015, 04:08 PM

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QUOTE(thpace @ Jun 19 2015, 03:59 PM)
Soon it will be like we call for tender and on one will come and bid for it
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Well at the end of the article the writer did wrote:

QUOTE
Perhaps the sponsors of these jets had better reserve their exhibition space for LIMA 2017.

Or perhaps not. Two weeks ago, RMAF commander Gen Rosland told the Malaysian media that the MiG-29N fleet would be upgraded after all. He said, “Initially there were plans to phase out the aircraft and replace them with another multi-role combat aircraft. However, we have decided to upgrade the aircraft to ensure it has similar capabilities with fighter jets owned by other countries.” o


This post has been edited by azriel: Jun 19 2015, 04:09 PM
SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 04:25 PM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Jun 19 2015, 04:08 PM)
Well at the end of the article the writer did wrote:
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BorneoAlliance
post Jun 19 2015, 04:50 PM

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DARPA Research Could Help Soldiers See Around Corners

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It's getting harder and harder to hide these days. Thanks to through-the-wall sensors, such as Camero-Tech's line of Xaver tactical radars, law enforcement and the military can detect anyone inside a closed room and determine his distance from the device. In fact, the FBI and U.S. Marshals Service have been secretly using these sensors for more than two years, according to USA Today.

Now DARPA wants to go one step further: It is researching ways of seeing around corners and behind walls, something not possible with conventional line-of-sight cameras and scopes. Called the Revolutionary Enhancement of Visibility by Exploiting Active Light-fields (REVEAL) program, the idea is to use bouncing photons of light to construct a 3D image of a person otherwise hidden from view.

DARPA didn't respond to a request from PM for an interview with REVEAL program manager Predrag Milojkovic. But DARPA's recent announcement of REVEAL indicates the agency is using as a springboard the pioneering work of Ramesh Raskar, head of the MIT Media Lab, and Andreas Velten, a University of Wisconsin-Madison physicist.

That team, which earned the team a 2012 Breakthrough Award from Popular Mechanics, used a femtolaser to flash a pulse of light lasting less than a trillionth of a second against a flat, vertical surface. The light then scattered off of that surface, and the bouncing photons interacted with an object—in this case a small poseable mannequin—otherwise hidden from the operator's view.

The equipment you need can take up a whole table, so forget about wearing it like a pair of goggles

A very high speed camera, sitting alongside the laser, then registered the bouncing photons as they returned at slightly different speeds, explains Ashok Veeraraghavan, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rice University who was on the team. This time-of-flight information allowed researchers to tell how far each photon had traveled and what it had bounced against. Ultimately, that helped them construct a crude 3D image of the hidden mannequin.

Clearly, the ability to see around corners would be a huge advantage in war. But it's one thing to conduct round-the-corner imaging under the controlled conditions of a sterile lab, and it's quite another to try it on the battlefield, Veeraraghavan says.

For starters, the equipment you need (at least for now) can take up a whole table, so forget about wearing it like a pair of night vision goggles. Furthermore, the imaging process isn't instantaneous. Before you go bouncing light off of a wall, you need to know the reflectiveness of the surface. It is matted or mirror-like? All that matters to the scattering light. Next, one has to contend with the light measurement and image reconstruction.

"You need to do multiple measurements over a period of many minutes," Veeraraghavan says. "Then there's the 'deconvolution,' to undo the effects of multiple [light] scattering. It takes up to several minutes to solve these computational problems before an image of these unseen objects can be created."

Clearly, the ability to see around corners would be a huge advantage in war.

Finally, everything must remain still, including the hidden object. "Currently, minor movements—things like vibration, camera movement and laser movement—effect the quality of the reconstruction," he says.

To put it simply, then, DARPA faces a host of challenges in making this technology ready for the real world. The four-year REVEAL program doesn't aim to develop a deployable system. It's mostly looking at the fundamentals. To build a real round-the-corner imager, sensors would need to be faster and more compact, and scientists would need new techniques to address unpredictable environmental conditions. And that, Veeraraghavan says, is still many years away.

http://www.popularmechanics.com/military/r...around-corners/
BorneoAlliance
post Jun 19 2015, 04:57 PM

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Future of the Malaysian defense industry-market attractiveness, competitive landscape and forecasts to 2020 just published


Military Security Defence Market Research Reports Annoucements

WhaTech Channel: Military Market Research Reports
Published on Friday, 19 June 2015 08:29
Submitted by Pawan Kumar WhaTech Agency
News from:Research Beam
Page views: 2 times
This report offers detailed analysis of the Malaysian defense industry with market size forecasts covering the next five years. This report will also analyze factors that influence demand for the industry, key market trends, and challenges faced by industry participants.

Summary

The Future of the Malaysian Defense Industry Market Attractiveness, Competitive Landscape and Forecasts to 2020, published by Strategic Defence Intelligence, provides readers with detailed analysis of both historic and forecast defense industry values, factors influencing demand, the challenges faced by industry participants, analysis of industry leading companies, and key news.

Key Findings

Over the historic period, Malaysia’s defense expenditure registered a growth rate of 3.66%, increasing from US$4.7 billion in 2011 to US$5.4 billion in 2015
Malaysia’s military expenditure, valued at US$5.4 billion in 2015, is expected to increase to US$7.2 billion by 2020, registering a CAGR of 5.89% over the forecast period
Malaysian military expenditure will be driven by the modernization of defense systems, international peacekeeping operations, and territorial disputes with neighboring countries

The Defense Ministry is expected to procure corvettes, multi-role aircraft, armored personnel carrier, and

In particular, it provides an in-depth analysis of the following:

Malaysian defense industry market size and drivers: detailed analysis of the Malaysian defense industry during 2016-2020, including highlights of the demand drivers and growth stimulators for the industry. It also provides a snapshot of the country’s expenditure and modernization patterns

Budget allocation and key challenges: insights into procurement schedules formulated within the country and a breakdown of the defense budget with respect to the army, navy, and air force. It also details the key challenges faced by defense market participants within the country

Porter’s Five Force analysis of the Malaysian defense industry: analysis of the market characteristics by determining the bargaining power of suppliers, bargaining power of buyers, threat of substitution, intensity of rivalry, and barriers to entry

Import and Export Dynamics: analysis of prevalent trends in the country’s imports and exports over the last five years

Market opportunities: details of the top five defense investment opportunities over the coming 10 years

Competitive landscape and strategic insights: analysis of the competitive landscape of the Malaysian defense industry. It provides an overview of key players, together with insights such as key alliances, strategic initiatives, and a brief financial analysis

This report will give the user confidence to make the correct business decisions based on a detailed analysis of the Malaysian defense industry market trends for the coming five years

The market opportunity section will inform the user about the various military requirements that are expected to generate revenues during the forecast period. The description includes technical specifications, recent orders, and the expected investment pattern by the country during the forecast period

Detailed profiles of the top domestic and foreign defense manufacturers with information about their products, alliances, recent contract wins, and financial analysis wherever available.

This will provide the user with a total competitive landscape of the sector
A deep qualitative analysis of the Malaysian defense industry covering sections including demand drivers, Porter’s Five Forces Analysis, Key Trends and Growth Stimulators, and latest industry contracts

http://www.researchbeam.com/future-of-the-...ket#src=whatech
BorneoAlliance
post Jun 19 2015, 06:29 PM

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How the U.S. military reloaded for big power warfare

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For more than a decade after 9/11, the United States has been involved in a series of wars that pitted the might of the U.S. military against terrorists and guerrilla movements. Examples include the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, North Africa, Somalia, Pakistan and the Philippines.

The military, which traditionally trains for high intensity war against other nation states, was drawn into fighting so-called "low intensity conflict." Unprepared to fight ragtag bands of insurgents in back alleys, jungles, and mountain passes, the services adapted.

Tankers and artillerymen turned in their tanks and howitzers for Humvees and patrolled Iraqi cities. The U.S. Army's Stryker fighting vehicles, introduced during the Iraq War, traded armor protection and firepower for mobility and speed.

Long-ranged B-1B bombers, originally designed to devastate the Soviet Union with nuclear weapons, were repurposed to drop bombs on the Taliban. U.S. Navy aircraft carriers flew sorties over Iraq and Afghanistan, and U.S. Navy destroyers chased pirates off the coast of Somalia.

Now, as combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have ceased, the Pentagon is turning its attention to future battlefields. Chief among them is Eastern Europe, where Russia has been conducting an undeclared war in Ukraine and threatens NATO. On the other side of the world, China threatens Taiwan and has acted aggressively against American allies in the South and East China Seas.

These potential adversaries are nothing like Al Qaeda, Iraqi militiamen, or the Taliban. They are what the Pentagon calls "near-peer competitors": countries with their own professional armies, equipped with modern weapons comparable to our own. Russia alone has 771,000 troops, equipped with 22,550 tanks and 1,399 combat aircraft. China has 2.25 million troops, 204 seagoing combat ships, and 2,100 combat aircraft.

Both Russia and China are pressing dubious territorial claims, and the United States is pushing back against both. In recent months, American forces have been forward deployed to Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Poland, and Romania, as a show of force to Russia. This week alone, eight A-10 Warthog tank killer jets from the Maryland National Guard flew to Estonia for training, and B-52 bombers took part in exercises in over the Baltic Sea.

In the Western Pacific, the Littoral Combat Ship USS Fort Worth was recently shadowed by a Chinese frigate near waters claimed by China, and American maritime patrol aircraft have flown near artificial islands the Chinese military has been building in the South China Sea.

This new focus on big-power war is quietly reshaping the military, in many ways back to what it was before 9/11. The same Stryker vehicles purchased during the Iraq War are being up-gunned, the .50 caliber machine gun to be replaced by a more powerful 30-millimeter cannon capable of killing the latest generation Russian armored vehicles.

At sea, the U.S. Navy is moving ahead with a new generation of nuclear powered aircraft carriers, the Gerald Ford class, with one nearing completion and a second about to begin construction. These ships will fly the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and, in the future, drones capable of a wide variety of missions. The U.S. Navy is pondering accelerating the production of the Virginia-class attack submarine from two to three per year, and a replacement the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines are on the drawing board.

In the air, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will be joining the Air Force, Navy, and Marines by 2019. The Air Force will buy approximately 100 Long Range Strike Bombers capable of attacking targets on the ground and at sea over vast distances. The KC-46 Pegasus, a next generation aerial refueling tanker, will increase the operating range of both over the vastness of Eurasia and the Pacific.

This retasking of the military back to big power war will be enormously expensive. Ships and aircraft purchased during the 20th Century need to be replaced. The USS Gerald Ford will cost an estimated $12.88 billion, although the second ship in the class will allegedly cost less. The F-35 fighter program will cost $400 billion to develop and procure 2,443 jets, and the Long Range Strike Bomber project will cost $55 billion. Even the KC-46 tanker will cost 4.9 billion to develop and produce just 18 planes.

The United States is preparing to face down other big powers, but it doesn't necessarily face a second Cold War. There are strong incentives for Moscow and Beijing to avoid an adversarial relationship with Washington, one of which is the massive size of the U.S. military. The cost of maintaining that incentive, however, isn't going to come cheap.

http://theweek.com/articles/561194/how-mil...g-power-warfare
SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 07:09 PM

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azriel
post Jun 19 2015, 08:23 PM

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QUOTE
Indonesia to re-establish dedicated ASW aviation squadron

Ridzwan Rahmat, Singapore - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
19 June 2015

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An Airbus AS565 Panther helicopter similar to the one that will be operated in the TNI-AL's Skuadron Udara 100. Source: Airbus Helicopters

The Indonesian Navy (Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Laut, TNI-AL) is reviving an anti-submarine warfare (ASW) aviation squadron that was last operational in the 1970s, the service's chief of staff, Admiral Ade Supandi, has said.

The formation, known as Skuadron Udara 100, will provide operational support for the TNI-AL's incoming batch of AS565 Panthers on order from Airbus Helicopters. The service is anticipating the delivery of 11 AS565s that will be fitted with the Helicopter Long-Range Active Sonar (HELRAS) dipping sonar and torpedo-launching system.

"We want to ensure that our combat capabilities are in line with the new platforms and weapon systems that we are receiving", said Adm Supandi in a report carried by state news agency Antara on 17 June. The admiral also emphasised the need for a dedicated squadron to operationalise naval aviation capabilities and doctrine that are specific to submarine prosecution.

A TNI-AL source told IHS Jane's on 19 June that plans to revive the squadron are under way but he was unable to give a timeline for its establishment. "The squadron will only be commissioned closer to the date of the first Panther's delivery", he said.

Skuadron Udara 100 will be based at the TNI-AL airbase in Juanda, Surabaya. The service is scheduled to receive all 11 Panther ASW helicopters by 2017 and will operate the aircraft primarily from the navy's SIGMA 10514-class guided-missile corvettes. The service also told IHS Jane's in October 2014 that it will equip its three Bung Tomo-class corvettes with the Panther.


http://www.janes.com/article/52429/indones...iation-squadron
SUSalaskanbunny
post Jun 19 2015, 10:36 PM

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Joined: Nov 2009
From: Vietnam

indon making lots of procurement these days... jokowi bowing to the military

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